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Earth The Almighty Buck Businesses Microsoft

Reid Hoffman, Bill Gates, Others Ante Up Another $30 Million To Change.org the World (fortune.com) 60

theodp writes: Fortune reports that LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman is "leading a $30 million funding round in Change.org, a for-profit petition and fundraising website focused on social and political change." Joining Hoffman in this round, as well as an earlier $25 million round in 2014, is Bill Gates. Change.org, Hoffman explained in a Friday LinkedIn post, "helps enable a world where you don't need to hire a lobbyist to have real impact on the issues and policies that matter to you." He added, "In its decade of existence, Change.org petitions have resulted in more than 21,000 victories, i.e., instances in which a government agency, corporation, or other entity has changed a regulation or a policy in the face of a Change.org petition urging it to do so." Last year, Hoffman joined Gates and some of the biggest names in tech and corporate America who threw their weight behind a Change.org petition that tried to get Congress to fund K-12 Computer Science education. The Change.org petition fell short of its 150,000-signature goal despite claims of support from 90% of the parents of the nation's 58 million K-12 schoolchildren (based on a Google-funded survey of 1,685 parents), widespread press coverage (including a full-page ad in petition signer Jeff Bezos's Washington Post), lobbying efforts by the tech coalition that organized the petition (which counts LinkedIn and Microsoft among its members), and even some free PR from Change.org.
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Reid Hoffman, Bill Gates, Others Ante Up Another $30 Million To Change.org the World

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  • The main problem with Change.org is that it's still easy to ignore online petitions like theirs.

    They tout their "victories".

    How many petitions fell by the wayside or were simply told "no"?

    • by Jzanu ( 668651 ) on Saturday May 27, 2017 @02:48PM (#54498505)
      The raw number of victories on any issues is the significant measure of effectiveness. Cost per petition is tiny, and diversity increases impact as well as traffic and exposure for all petitions. Global scope means it isn't tied up in the American political gang wars. For instance, The fight against slavery in Mauritania benefits from exposure to those in nations that enforce peace and human rights. Those who could end it don't because they think it doesn't hurt them, but a sign of international will scares them into action. Force always follows awareness, and that applies all the way from economic to military intervention.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The main problem with Change.org is that it is for-profit and sells your details every time you sign a petition on their site.

  • by Cyberpunk Reality ( 4231325 ) on Saturday May 27, 2017 @02:41PM (#54498487)
    If they cared about these issues, as opposed to wanting to pretend to care, they could be doing more than asking others to commit more than an insignificant percentage of their own net worth to the issue.
  • We don't need more coders. We lack in the basics of reading, writing, speaking, civics, knowledge of history, science and math. Build a foundation first.

  • Also, why is it Change.org if it's for profit? Aren't orgs suppose to be non-profits?
    • Also, why is it Change.org if it's for profit? Aren't orgs suppose to be non-profits?

      There are no such rules. I got a .org just because I could, not because I had to. Of course, now, I'm kicking my own ass over it.

  • Pocket change from Billionaires - oh how generous.

  • The best government money can buy!

  • "helps enable a world where you don't need to hire a lobbyist"

    Billionaires fund a lobby to "help the little guy" with issues that "matter". They are advertising their efforts as altruism, while in reality selling products, corruption and partisan politics.

    Meanwhile, the average citizens are sending their money to the ACLU and the NRA to protect the guarantees in the Constitution's Bill of Rights.

  • >> a for-profit petition and fundraising website.

    So what makes this any different from just another big megacorp buying off politicians to protect its own agenda?

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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